Sharpe's Ex'or v. Rockwood

78 Va. 24, 1883 Va. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 78 Va. 24 (Sharpe's Ex'or v. Rockwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharpe's Ex'or v. Rockwood, 78 Va. 24, 1883 Va. LEXIS 5 (Va. 1883).

Opinion

Eichardson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question in this case is as to the liability of the •sureties of Wellington Goddin, executor of Henry W. Sharpe, deceased.

The testator departed this life in the year 1856, leaving a will, which was duly admitted to probate on the 12th day of August, 1856, by which Wellington Goddin was appointed •executor, and as such qualified on the 14th day of August, 1856, and entered into bond in the penalty of $20,000, with J. L. Apperson, L. B. Price and Jesse F. Keesee as his sure[27]*27ties; and the bond thus entered into was with condition, in the usual form, that “the said Wellington Goddin should faithfully discharge the duties of his office o£ executor.”

The controversy in this case arises out of the seventh clause of the testator’s will, by which he gave “ to Martha Eockwood, wife of James Eockwood, and daughter of Thomas Bridgewater, deceased, $2,000, to her and her heirs forever.” Martha Eockwood died prior to the time at which said testator departed this life, leaving surviving her six children, to-wit: John Thomas, Ann Eliza, Martha Jane, Lucy Hubbard, Charles Custis and Sarah Margaret, to whom said bequest passed at the death of said testator, under and by virtue of'§ 13, ch. 118, Code of 1873.

In the year 1858 John Thomas Eockwood, one of the children of said Martha Eockwood, brought a suit in equity in the circuit court of the city of Eichmond against said Wellington Goddin, executor of said Sharpe, James Eockwood, his father, and his said brothers and sisters, of whom he alleged in his bill that Lucy H., Sarah Margaret and Charles Custis, were then infants, and the other two adults.

In his bill the said John Thomas Eockwood alleges that he is informed by the said executor “ that the estate of his testator is fully able to satisfy and pay all the legacies under the said will, and that he was only prevented from paying same promptly by reason of the question which had arisen as to whom he should pay the bequest to said Martha Eockwood.” The said executor answered said bill, and admitted said allegation of sufficiency of assets for the purpose, and willingness to pay the said legacy when it should be known to whom it was rightfully going; and the said circuit court, by a decree entered in said cause, on the 15th day of December, 1858, declared that the six children aforesaid of Martha Eockwood were entitled to the said legacy of $2,000, and decreed that the said Goddin, executor as aforesaid, should, out of the estate of the said testator, [28]*28in his hands to be administered, pay to each of the adults aforesaid, one-sixth part of said $2,000, with interest from the 23d day of July, 1857.

At the time of the rendition of this decree, it appears that the appellees, who were infants, were not represented by any guardian,, and hence as to the shares of these infants no decree directing payment was made, there being no authorized hand to receive payment; but the cause was retained for such future action as might be necessary. And it appears that the cause remained on the docket until 1867, when it was stricken therefrom, with leave to any person interested to reinstate the same for good cause shown. It was so reinstated after the bringing of this suit, and ordered to be heard together therewith. This suit was brought and prosecuted as supplementary to the previous pending suit of John Thomas Rockwood v. said Goddin, executor, &c., and als., and was so treated in its decree by the court below.

By the third clause of his will the testator, Henry W. Sharpe, manumitted his slaves (naming them) and their increase. By the fourth clause thereof he bequeathed to Laura Ann, one of said manumitted slaves, $10,000. By the thirteenth and last clause said testator named Wellington Goddin as his executor, who, at his death, was to be succeeded by Augustus Bodeker, named as such successor; and in the same clause said testator expresses the desire that on the qualification of said Goddin as executor, or of the said Bodeker after him, security be required only for the protection of the legacy to said Laura Ann, and that the bond be in the penalty of $20,000.

The entire estate of said testator passed into the hands of Wellington Goddin, executor as aforesaid, in good money, long prior to the war. In fact, the bulk of it was received by him, in gold or its equivalent, prior to the year 1859; very little after that year, as appears from the Settled ac[29]*29counts of said executor. It clearly appears, not only from tlie admissions of said executor, before referred to, but from his inventory and accounts, that he received assets more than sufficient to pay all the bequests of the testator, including that of the $2,000 to Martha Eockwood, here in controversy.

The executor, Goddin, kept the money thus received by him, in gold or its equivalent, before the war, or so much of it as he had not paid out to other legatees, until July the 10th, 1863. He then made an ex parte application in vacation, to the judge of the circuit court of the city of Eichmond, for leave to invest the sum of $12,000, that being about the amount o£ the balance in good money in his hands; and said court, by an order made on the same day, accordingly granted him leave to invest the said sum in Confederate bonds, which he did.

Subsequently, upon the application by the appellees to said executor for payment of the amounts due them, and refusal by said executor to pay the same, they, on the 30th day of December, 1878, instituted this suit against said executor and his sureties, to recover their shares respectively of said $2,000 bequeathed to said Martha Eockwood.

The cause came on to hearing in the chancery court of the city of Eichmond, on the 28th day of October, 1880, when a decree was rendered in favor of the complainants, the appellees here, against said executor and his sureties, for their respective shares of said legacy, and from that decree this appeal was allowed.

The several assignments of error will now be noticed in their order.

I. It is contended that the true period of limitation, so far as the sureties of the executor are concerned, is five years—not ten. A mere reference to the 9th section of chapter 146 of our Code would seem to be all-sufficient to overturn this position. This section of our statute has [30]*30received the emphatic interpretation of this court. In Leake's Ex'or v. Leake, 75 Va. 801, it is held that the statute just referred to prescribes a plain test for determining when the cause of action is deemed to have accrued in suits upon fiduciary bonds, and that there is no statutory bar until ten years after the right of action has accrued -t which period begins, by express provision of the statute, to run from the return day of an execution against a personal ■ representative, or from the time of the right to require payment or delivery, by such representative, upon an order made by a court acting upon his account. When there has been no execution or order (and none is pretended in this case), there is no bar other than that arising from staleness of demand as recognized by courts of equity.

It is insisted, however, by counsel for the appellants, that Leake v. Leake does not correctly propound the law on this subject; and that it is opposed to the decision of the supreme court of the United States, in Lupton v. Janney, 13 Pet. 381. This is an unfounded assumption.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Va. 24, 1883 Va. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharpes-exor-v-rockwood-va-1883.